Many local authorities are ______ opposed to the introduction of comprehensive schooling.A
Many local authorities are ______ opposed to the introduction of comprehensive schooling.
A.strangely
B.strictly
C.severely
D.sharply
Many local authorities are ______ opposed to the introduction of comprehensive schooling.
A.strangely
B.strictly
C.severely
D.sharply
A.betrayed
B.driven
C.deceived
D.convinced
The main idea of the passage is__________ .
A.tourism burdens the local people with many problems
B.tourism needs a proper planning
C.tourism must be supposed by buildings and hotels
D.tourism can provide people more jobs
A.Tell the owner two months in advance that she's moving.
B.Alert the housing authorities to her problem.
C.Move to another apartment in the same building.
D.Leave the end of the month.
Passage One
Every morning, kids from a local high school are working hard. They are making and selling special coffee at a coffee cafe. They are also making a lot of money.
These students can make up to twelve hundred dollars a day. They are selling their special coffee to airplane passengers. After the students get paid, the rest of the money goes to helping a local youth project.
These high school students use a space in the Oakland airport. It is usually very crowded. Many people who fly on the planes like to drink the special coffee.
One customer thinks that the coffee costs a lot but it is good and worth it. Most customers are pleasant but some are unhappy. They do not like it if the coffee cafe is not open for business.
The students earn $ 6.10 an hour plus tips. They also get school credit while they learn how to run a business. Many of the students enjoy the work although it took some time 1o learn how to do it.
They have to learn how to steam milk, load the pots, and add flavor. It takes some skill and sometimes
mistakes are made. The most common mistake is forgetting to add the coffee.
36. Based on the passage, it seems that the purpose of the cafe is to______.
A. learn a skill
B. help a youth project
C. do business
D. earn school credit
Television
Television is the greatest communication medium ever designed and operated by man. It sends into the human brain an 【B1】______ amount of opinions and information and 【B2】______ moral and artistic standards for all of us. Every minute of a television programme teaches us something. It is never neutral (中立的) 【B3】______ . For example, how and when public issues are 【B4】______ depends in large part 【B5】______ how they are treated by the television networks in entertainment 【B6】______ news and public affairs programmes. What the American people think about government and politics in 【B7】______ , as well as a favorite candidate in 【B8】______ , is largely influenced by 【B9】______ .
Unfortunately, commercial television seldom 【B10】______ anything of value to our lives. Many American express a deep hostility (敌意) 【B11】______ television because they know most TV programmes are 【B12】______ poor quality and that something these programmes are even 【B13】______ .
The question is: how can television be improved? There are many things the ordinary 【B14】______ can do. For example, he 【B15】______ complain to his local TV stations about offensive advertising. He can 【B16】______ citizens' groups to urge local TV stations to 【B17】______ their programmes. 【B18】______ these groups should propose regular analyses of special TV commercials and programmes by educators, doctors, etc. to 【B19】______ the influence of these programmes on children and adults. Television can be our most exciting medium if we just think about 【B20】______ to improve it.
A.endless
B.ending
C.ended
D.end
1.A.ship B.wool C.wood D.steel
2.A.entertainment B.entertain C.entertaining D.entertainer
3.A.pessimistic B.passive C.optimistic D.persuasive
4.A.Texas B.Illinois C.California D.Sydney
5.A.plays B.pictures C.novels D.games
All the universities are private institutions. Each has its【65】governing councils,【66】some local businessmen and local politicians as【67】as a few academics(大学教师).The state began to give grants to them fifty years【68】, and by 1970 each university derived nearly all its【69】from state grants. Students have to【70】fees and living costs, but every student may receive from the local authority of the place【71】he lives a personal grant which is enough to pay his full costs, including lodging and【72】unless his parents are【73】. Most【74】take jobs in the summer【75】about six weeks, but they do not normally do outside【76】during the academic years. The Department of Education takes【77】for the payments which cover the whole expenditure of the【78】, but it does not exercise direct control. It can have an important influence【79】new developments through its power to distribute funds, but it takes the advice of the University Grants Committee, a body which mainly【80】of academics.
(61)
A.with
B.by
C.at
D.into
Until recently, the observation-intensive approach needed for accurate, very short range forecasts, or "nowcasts" , was impracticable. The cost of equipping and operating many thousands of conventional weather stations was extremely high, and the difficulties involved in rapidly collecting and processing the raw weather data from such a network were beyond overcoming. Fortunately, scientific and technological advance have overcome most of these problems. Radar systems, automated weather instruments , and satellites are all capable of making detailed, nearly continuous observations over large regions at a relatively low cost. Communication satellites can transmit data around the world cheaply and immediately, and modern computers can quickly compile and analyze this large volume of weather information. Meteorologists (气象学家) and computer scientists now work together to design computer programs and video equipment capable of transforming raw weather data into words, symbols, and vivid graphic displays that forecasters can interpret easily and quickly. As meteorologists have begun using these new technologies in weather forecasting offices, nowcasting is becoming a reality.
What is the best title of the passage?
A.Severe Thunderstorms and Damages
B.Weather Forecasting and Life-threatening
C.Science Advances and Nowcasts
D.Available Data and Nowcasts
Why are so many【37】? Susan George affirms with conviction, and with solid【38】, that it is not because there【39】too many passengers on" Spaceship Earth ", not because【40】bad weather or changing climates, but because of food【41】by the rich.【42】the poor go hungry.
The multinational agribusiness corporations,【43】governments with their food "aid" policies and supposedly neural multilateral development organizations【44】responsibility for their【45】.
They all work in corporation【46】local elites, themselves nurtured and protected by the powerful in the【47】world. The United States【48】the way, leads the pack and is【49】imposing its control over the whole planet.
Only those【50】people who can become consumers will eat in the Brave New World being shaped【51】the well-fed. The standard liberal solution to【52】the world-population control or the Green Revolution are just【53】the hungry poor don't need. All the need is social change, otherwise known as【54】. With that, they could, and would, resolve most of their problems【55】.
(41)
A.spend
B.read
C.finish
D.overtake